# Manufacturability Assessment of Design Decisions for Reducing Material Diversity in Single-Piece and Small-Batch Production

**Authors:** Dorota Więcek, Dariusz Więcek, Ivan Kuric

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ma19020399 · Materials · 2026-01-19

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a method to reduce material diversity in small-batch manufacturing while managing costs and improving decision-making.

## Contribution

An integrated model combining design, process planning, and ABC costing to assess manufacturability and reduce material diversity.

## Key findings

- Material assortment can be reduced by 41% without violating technological constraints.
- The method leads to cost savings of approximately 11,000 PLN in a case study.
- Integrating design and logistics data improves material management in machinery manufacturing.

## Abstract

What are the main findings?
A manufacturability assessment method focused on reducing material diversity was developed.Alternative material use was analysed considering machining and material management costs.An integrated model combining design, process planning and ABC costing was proposed.

A manufacturability assessment method focused on reducing material diversity was developed.

Alternative material use was analysed considering machining and material management costs.

An integrated model combining design, process planning and ABC costing was proposed.

What are the implications of the main findings?
Material assortment can be reduced without violating technological constraints.Local increases in machining cost may lead to overall system-level cost savings.The method supports intelligent decision-making in single-piece and small-batch production.

Material assortment can be reduced without violating technological constraints.

Local increases in machining cost may lead to overall system-level cost savings.

The method supports intelligent decision-making in single-piece and small-batch production.

The article presents a method that supports the evaluation of design manufacturability in the area of input material selection, enabling the reduction in material diversity under single-piece and small-batch production conditions. The proposed approach combines the analysis of alternative materials with activity-based costing (ABC) and data concerning actual and planned material requirements. The method enables the assessment of the impact of semi-finished product substitution on material costs, processing costs, production organisation, and material-management costs before order execution is launched. In the conducted case study, it was demonstrated that effective management of material diversity can significantly reduce the range of materials and decrease total manufacturing costs. For the analysed period, the number of material items was reduced from 32 to 19 (a 41% reduction), resulting in cost savings of approximately 11,000 PLN. In addition to total cost, the approach supports the assessment of operational benefits associated with reduced material diversity, such as a lower number of material items, fewer suppliers, reduced inbound inspection and receipt operations, and decreased inventory levels and capital tied up in stock. Material substitution may decrease or increase direct material costs and may increase machining time when larger dimensions are used; therefore, the method jointly evaluates cost and lead-time impacts prior to order release. The results confirm that integrating design, technological, and logistics data is an effective approach to rationalising material management in machinery manufacturing enterprises.

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## Figures

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## References

36 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842659/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842659